Call me a hipster. I just enjoy simpler indie games more than anything else I saw at the show (although Project P-100 was very intriguing)

Kyle Pulver is one of those devs I respect because I always respect someone who breaks into the mainstream and becomes successful by my obscure-indie-ass standards. He made Snapshot, Offspring Fling, and a lot of other stuff you may or may not have played.

Yes you are.

Because I’m in pretentious-overload, quite a few indie-dev dragons will be coming up soon! I’ll announce any new dragon posts on my Twitter.

During the signing, he had a camera guy there to film everything. As I asked for my dragon, and Tim began drawing, the camera guy made sure to shove the lens almost right on the paper to capture every second of it.

I’m pretty sure when Tim Schafer goes to his barbershop, he brings along a big photo of Jack Black, silently hands it to the barber, and leans back in the chair ready.

Well, I loved the Indie MegaBooth, let’s go see how the friends I made on Friday are handling the no-doubt enormous overflow lines for their titles on Saturday.

Once again, I have no idea when I’ll be able to scan the next one, but I’ll announce it on Twitter.

So given that PAX was half-over at this point, I had to rush if I wanted some more big-name dragons in my sketchbook.

Either that, or get incredibly lucky and just bump into some developers.

Tim Schafer was doing autographs, so naturally I joined the line. Psychonauts posters. Psychonauts posters everywhere. Talk about a game with legs.

A lady behind me got all star-struck and asked for a photo with a man I hadn’t noticed until then (apologies John, you’re not exactly the tallest broom in the cupboard). I knew it was John Romero, even though he had his back turned to me; nobody else has hair that lush. What luck! He seemed to really like my dragon book idea (of course he would, he’s John Romero) so he got to work.

Problem is, it was almost my turn to go up and meet Tim Schafer. Oh no. Would John finish in time? Would I have to snatch the book from him? Would I have to forfeit my spot in the line? (I’m not being melodramatic; the enforcers were very strict)

Phew.

Thanks John! Just as the enforcer came to pick me up.

I don’t really have a set schedule for when I’ll post these dragons. I’ll announce every new post on my Twitter though!

After breezing through the 4th floor expo hall on Friday, I went to the 6th floor on Saturday. Aside from the League of Legends spectacle, booths included SuperGiant Games, Halfbrick, and Mojang.

Standing in the corner of the Mojang booth, was Markus “Notch” Persson, wearing, if I remember correctly, a bright green polo shirt, only 3 or 4 people waiting in line to chat and get a photo.

We met and talked about 0x10c, his upcoming project about creating a video game out of an emulator. Some hero already ported GCC to this machine, so luckily I can avoid the nightmare that is assembly language. Before we parted, I offered my book for his autograph.

I remembered my dragon sketch idea, so it was now or never. Time to ask for my first dragon!

A for effort.

Notch was surprisingly unperturbed, maybe even amused, by my request, so I gained confidence in this project (yes, I’m calling it a project now) and in asking other developers for their sketches.

I just needed to find them. Or magically bump into them…

I’ll try to post these regularly, although I might miss some days due to being busy/tired/drunk/CBF/whatever. I’ll notify everyone when a new scan goes up via Twitter (hooray for begging for followers!)

Who’s ever gone to a video games convention and asked for an autograph from a game developer? The answer is likely, “most of you”.

Just before PAX Prime 2012, I got myself a nice big sketchbook hoping to fill it with signatures. Trouble is, I had one of those things called “thoughts”. They suck, don’t they. “These developers probably sign tons of autographs. Is their squiggle (I use that term deliberately for some developers, trust me) really going to be a valuable thing to chase? Why not get something unique and interesting out of them?”

So my first thought was to ask them to draw me a sketch. Great! However, I anticipated another problem. Imagine if someone simply asked you to “draw something”. That’s it. What would your reply be?

“OK, draw what?”

Creativity is triggered by limits. It’s that old “tell a joke” problem. This would be much more successful if I gave them a theme or a topic.

Well, why not dragons? They’re well-known, open to interpretation, and they’re just plain awesome. At the end, I’ll have a collection of dragon sketches I can compare. When I told some of my friends about this idea, they looked at me like I was from Mars (as they would).

Would the developers react in the same way? I was still confident this would work, so I went developer-hunting. Who would the first lucky guy to be harassed by a 6’4″ indie with weirdo ideas?